- Effi Briest
infobox Book
name = Effi Briest
title_orig =
translator = Hugh Rorrison and Helen Chambers
image_caption =
author =Theodor Fontane
cover_artist =
country =Germany
language = German
series =
genre =Novel
publisher = ? & (Eng. trans. reissuePenguin Classics )
release_date = 1894
media_type = Print (Hardback &Paperback )
pages =
isbn = NA & reissue ISBN 0-14-044766-0
preceded_by =
followed_by ="Effi Briest" (1894) is realist
Theodor Fontane 's masterpiece and one of the most famous Germannovel s of all time.Thomas Mann is quoted, on the back of the German edition of Effi Briest by Reclam, as saying that if one had to reduce one'slibrary to sixnovels , "Effi Briest" would have to be one of them¹. Its influence on Mann's early work "Buddenbrooks " is evident. Along with the more famous "Anna Karenina " and "Madame Bovary ", the novel forms a trilogy onmarriage in the 19th century from the female point of view. All three areadultery tragedies . (See alsoAdultery in literature .)Plot introduction
Effi Briest is the daughter of a nobleman in northern
Germany . At seventeen, she is married off to Baron Geert von Innstetten, a man twice her age who years ago had courted her mother and been turned down because of his insufficient social position, which he has in the meantime improved.Plot summary
Effi, still practically a child, but attracted by notions of social honour, consents to living in the small Baltic town of Kessin, where she is miserably unhappy. Her husband is away for weeks at a time. Snubbed by the local aristocracy, she finds but one companion in the whole town. Her suspicions that their house may be haunted have been, perhaps on purpose, not completely laid to rest by Innstetten.
The genial and somewhat crass Major Crampas arrives in town, and although he is married and known as a womanizer, Effi cannot help but enjoy his attentions. As we are only delicately told, a full relationship is consummated.
Years later Effi's daughter Annie is growing up, the family has moved to
Berlin as Innstetten moves up in the ranks, and all in all things have turned out well for Effi. But by chance her ancient correspondence with Crampas sees the light of day, and Innstetten decides immediately todivorce her. He is given custody of their daughter.Miserable, Effi lives alone. Covered by scandal as she is, her parents will not take her back. Crampas is challenged to a
duel and killed by Innstetten, who afterwards has second thoughts about his action. His life, too, is ruined: he is never happy though his social position improves.Effi is finally taken in by her parents, and dies serenely at the estate of Hohen-Cremmen, in a very symmetrical ending that matches the beginning of the novel. Her parents vaguely realize their responsibility for her unhappiness, but ultimately they do not dare question the social constructs which caused the tragedy.
Manfred von Ardenne 's grandmotherElisabeth von Plotho is said to be the inspiration for Effi Briest.Editions
* First published in
Deutsche Rundschau , 1894 – 1895. [ [http://www.zeno.org/Literatur/M/Fontane,+Theodor/Romane Bibliography Fontane] on zeno.org]
* Penguin Books, 1967 ISBN 0-14-044190-5
* English translation by Hugh Rorrison and Helen Chambers, Angel Books 1996 ISBN 0-946162-44-1, reissued by Penguin (in Penguin Classics) 2001 ISBN 0-14-044766-0References
External links
*gutenberg|no=5323|name=Effi Briest de icon
*imdb character|0029176|Effi Briest (film character)
* [http://www.rither.de/a/deutsch/fontane-theodor/effi-briest/ Summaries for Effi Briest] de icon
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